Off My Rocker:
Recommendations from a Book Nut
Tea Time
(March 2007)
"You can never get a cup of tea large enough or a book long
enough to suit me." The sentence above is attributed to the late C. S.
Lewis, creator of the Narnia
Chronicles. The first title on this list of fiction involving tea might
have satisfied even Lewis on the criteria given.
TEA ROSE, by Jennifer Donnelly
This is a big (544 pages) Soap Opera of a book that causes one’s inner
sentimental twit to reach for another hanky even as one’s inner cynic rolls
its eyes.
In London’s poverty stricken East Side Fiona and Joe, who both work
horrible hours for pittances and who are in love from day one, dare to dream
big. Shilling by shilling they pool their savings against the day they can
afford to rent and stock a tea shop of their own.
Disaster strikes when Fiona’s father is murdered to prevent his organizing
the London dockers into a union. The loss of his wages plunges this hard-working
family from respectable working poor into abject poverty. The family all move
into one room in the infamous Whitechapel district; mother and youngest child
become ill; the eldest son adds to his poor wages by professional fighting, and
Fiona continues to work long hours as a tea-packer for the evil Burton tea
empire. Life goes from bad to worse as Fiona’s mother is murdered by the
Ripper when she leaves the room they’ve all been living in to fetch a doctor
for the baby; the baby soon follows her mother in death and the eldest son is
found floating in the Thames. To cap all Joe breaks Fiona’s heart.
Joe may have failed her, murderers may be after her but Fiona still has a
dream. She flees to America to live with her uncle Michael and learn
shop-keeping from him only to find his shop up for auction and him, having given
in to a grief his own, a drunk.
Fiona is determined to make good and pulls herself and her last remaining
family up by their bootstraps. She not only turns her uncle’s shop around, but
opens others and launches a line of highly successful tea houses as well.
She becomes a very wealthy woman and marries a viscount but her heart, what’s
left of it, still belongs to Joe.
Will she ever meet him again? And if she should, could she possibly forgive
his perfidy?
FLOWER BOY, by Karen Roberts
That children must be taught prejudice is clear in this tale of masters and
servants on a Ceylonese Tea Plantation.
Chandi, the son of the housekeeper sees no reason why the white plantation
manager’s new baby daughter should not become his best friend; as she grows
up, neither does Rose-Lizzie. However many, both Ceylonese and British see this
relationship as contravening the natural order and indicative of the moral decay
of the age. Nonetheless the children are supported in their innocent devotion by
Chandi’s mother and Rose- Lizzie’s father until world war forces them apart.
Do we learn much about tea production? Unfortunately, no (Rosalind
Laker,
where are you when we need you?). But for a tender yet clear-eyed look at the
stupidities of racial and cultural prejudice, this one is a winner.
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